The power of a guardian, under the statute of Illinois relating
to guardians and wards, approved April 10, 1812, Rev.Stats.
Illinois, 1874, c. 64, to mortgage the real estate of the ward is
subject to these express restrictions: (1) that he obtain the leave
of the county court, based upon petition setting out the condition
of the estate, the facts and circumstances on which the petition is
founded, and a description of the premises to be mortgaged; (2)
that the mortgage, if not in fee, must be for a term of years not
extending beyond the minority of the ward, and (3) that the time of
the maturity of the indebtedness secured by it should not extend
beyond the minority of the ward. It is also subject to the implied
restriction, controlling the discretion and power both of the
guardian and the county court, that the indebtedness secured by the
mortgage mast arise out of, and have some necessary or appropriate
connection with, the management of the ward's estate.
Mortgages executed in 1872, 1813 and 1876, by a guardian in
Illinois, with the leave of the county court, to secure the payment
of bonds given by him for moneys borrowed to pay off existing
encumbrances upon the ward's real property and to improve such
property by replacing thereon buildings that had been destroyed by
fire are sustained as not invalid under the above statute.
Such mortgages were not invalid because authorizing an absolute
sale and not expressly recognizing the right of redemption after
sale, for such right of redemption exists by statute as a rule of
property, whether recognized or not in the mortgage.
The United States Mortgage Company, a corporation of New York,
being authorized by its charter to lend money on bond and mortgage
on real estate situated within the United States, or upon any
hypothecation of such real estate, or upon hypothecation of bonds
or mortgages on such real estate, for any period of credit, could
contract in Illinois to lend money there upon bond and mortgage of
real estate at nine percent per annum (which the late of that state
permitted), although the highest rate of interest permitted by the
general laws of New York was seven percent, and although the
special charter of the company provided that no loan or advance of
money should be made by it "at a rate of interest exceeding the
legal rate."
In Illinois, overdue coupons, so drawn as to be negotiable
securities according to the general commercial law, bear interest
after maturity at the rate of six percent per annum. But an
interest warrant signed by a guardian,
Page 138 U. S. 314
who has contracted to be exempt from personal liability for the
principal debt or for the interest thereon, practically payable out
of particular funds, are not a security of that class, and do not
bear interest after maturity.
Where a certain sum of money is due and the creditor enters into
arrangements with his debtor to take a less sum provided that sum
is secured in a certain way and paid at a certain day, but if any
of the stipulations of the arrangement are not performed as agreed
upon, the creditor is to be entitled to recover the whole of the
original debt, such remitter to his original rights does not
constitute a penalty, and equity will not interfere to prevent its
observance.
A guardian having obtained leave of the county court to borrow
the sum of $95,000 and mortgage the ward's estate to secure its
payment, allowed the mortgagee, in the settlement of the loan, but
without the assent of that court, the sum of $7,219.27 in payment
of interest on overdue coupons upon previous loans, and received
from the mortgagee only $87,780.73.
Held: (1) that this
was not a contract within the meaning of the statute that the
company should receive usurious interest, for no such contract had
been attempted to be authorized by the county court; (2) that as
the allowance by the guardian of interest upon interest was under a
mistaken view of the obligation of the coupons in that regard, the
remedy was to treat the loan as one for only $87,780.73, making the
calculation of interest at the contract rate upon that basis, and
not to forfeit the interest upon the sum actually received by the
guardian from the mortgagee.
Where a guardian in Illinois, with leave of the county court,
contracted on behalf of his ward's estate for the repayment of
money borrowed, with interest at nine percent per annum, payable
semiannually until the principal sum "shall be fully paid" -- the
principal debt maturing, as required by the statute, before the
majority of the ward -- interest is to be calculated after the
ward's majority at the contract rate, and not at the statutory rate
of six percent. In such case, it is the right of the ward,
immediately upon attaining full age, to pay off the debt or, by
agreement with the lender, obtain an extension of the time of
maturity and a less rate of interest.
Whatever may be the rate of interest contracted for in Illinois,
after the debt is merged in a judgment or decree, the contract
ceases to exist and the rate of interest upon the sum adjudged to
be due is thereafter controlled by the statute.
This appeal brought up for review a decree,
United States
Mortgage Co. v. Sperry, 24 F. 838, and
United States
Mortgage Co. v. Sperry, 26 F. 727, ordering the sale of
certain real property in the City of Chicago belonging to the
appellee Henry W. Kingsbury in satisfaction of the aggregate amount
found to be due on three bonds given by
Page 138 U. S. 315
his guardian to the United States Mortgage Company, with the
approval of the County Court of Cook County -- by which court the
guardian was appointed -- for moneys borrowed to be used in
improving the ward's property and discharging certain encumbrances
upon it. The bonds, all signed by the guardian, were payable,
respectively, May 1, 1852, April 1, 1883, and December 1, 1883, and
each one was secured by mortgage of distinct parts of the real
estate directed to be sold. The mortgages bore date, respectively,
July 10, 1872, April 1, 1873, and December 1, 1876, and provided,
as did the bonds, that upon default, continuing for one month, in
the payment of interest as stipulated, the principal sum, together
with all arrearages of interest thereon should, at the option of
the Mortgage Company, become immediately due and collectible.
Default having occurred and continued for one month in the payment
of interest on each of the bonds, the company, on the 2d of
November, 1877, exercised that option, declared the principal and
all arrearages of interest to be immediately payable and
collectible, and within a few days after that date brought the
present suit for foreclosure.
The circumstances under which the bonds, coupons, and mortgages
were executed are as follows:
On the 5th of July, 1872, Anson Sperry, guardian of Kingsbury,
presented his petition, properly verified, to the County Court of
Cook County showing that the real property of the minor was subject
to encumbrance by mortgages to the amount of about $78,500, that
the debts secured by some of them were due, and the holders
demanding payment, that the holders of other mortgage debts, soon
to mature, were willing to accept payment and to assign or cancel
their mortgages, that upon all of the mortgages considerable
accumulations of interest were due and unpaid, that a portion of
the real estate belonging to the minor consisted of lot 6 and a
part of lot 5 in block 25 of the original Town of Chicago, and that
the buildings formerly thereon were destroyed by fire October 9,
1871; that the premises constituted a very large part of his estate
in point of productive value, were centrally located in Chicago,
and, before the destruction of the buildings
Page 138 U. S. 316
thereon, yielded large rents; that in the judgment of all
persons interested in the estate and in its proper management, the
buildings should be restored and the property made productive; that
no money had come to the guardian's hands with which to liquidate
the existing mortgage debts or the accumulated interest thereon;
that, the rents from the estate being insufficient for that
purpose, it was necessary that provision be made to prevent the
foreclosure of the mortgages; that there was no money of the estate
to be applied in restoring the buildings; that the cost of
constructing suitable buildings upon the premises would be about
$100,000, and that for the purpose of funding, consolidating, and
paying off the mortgage debts and constructing proper buildings, it
would be necessary to borrow about $200,000.
The prayer of the guardian was that he be authorized to
negotiate, for the purposes stated, a loan of not exceeding
$200,000 and to pay usual and reasonable commissions and brokerage
therefor upon such terms and for such time as shall be approved by
the court and allowed by law, the mortgage to rest upon certain
premises belonging to the minor, the metes and bounds of which are
given in the petition of the guardian. The authority asked for was
given and a loan in gold for $175,000 was negotiated with the
appellant. The bonds given therefor were made payable in gold May
1, 1882, with interest (evidenced by coupons signed by the
guardian) in like coin at the rate of nine percent, payable
semiannually, until the principal was paid, and the mortgage to
secure the payment of principal and interest was submitted to and
approved by the county court. The order of approval was made August
6, 1872.
Subsequently, on the 4th of September, 1872, the guardian filed
in the county court an inventory of the real and personal estate of
the minor which recited all the mortgages upon his property,
including those executed before he inherited it, and the above
mortgage for $175,000. This inventory was examined, approved, and
ordered to be recorded. A subsequent inventory filed by him
December 26, 1872, showed a balance of receipts in his hands of
$496.98, and a cash balance of
Page 138 U. S. 317
$30,026.71 unexpended from the loan that had been authorized by
the court. In that report he said
"that upon consultation with all parties interested, and with
persons of sound discretion and without interest, it is thought
best to construct on the north one hundred feet of lot six,
fronting on the alley north of Randolph Street, and being the north
end of Randolph Street lot, a public hall. There are no halls of
the character intended to be built north of 22d Street and east of
the south branch of the Chicago River, and the large number of
conventions, meeting, concerts, readings, and other assemblages of
a like character requires proper accommodations. The ground
proposed to be used is useless for almost any other purpose, but is
a source of large expense. The ground is eighty feet wide by one
hundred feet deep, and a hall with seating room for fifteen to
eighteen hundred people can be built at a cost of about $50,000,
from which an annual income of $10,000 at least can be realized. An
entrance can be made through the Clark Street building, and the
basement thereunder will rent for the purposes of an eating house
at a fair rent. All the property belonging to said estate is liable
to the dower right of Mrs. Jane C. Kingsbury of one-third of the
net income thereof, and to the dower right of Mrs. Eva Lawrence of
two-ninths of said net income."
This report was examined, approved, and recorded.
On the 3d of March, 1873, the guardian presented another
petition to the county court showing that he had used $68,643.80
out of the above loan in paying off old mortgages on the minor's
estate, leaving a balance of $126,002.58, which he estimated would
all or nearly all be required in the construction of buildings then
being erected on the Randolph Street front of lot 6 in block 35,
and the building on that part of lot 5, in the same block, owned by
the minor. His petition also showed that the rear part of lot 6 had
upon it, before the fire of 1871, a public hall or theater, and
that upon careful consideration, and after consultation with
judicious, competent persons, it was best for the estate to erect a
public hall upon the rear of that lot, having its front on Clark
Street, an to be used for concerts, lectures, readings, etc. It
Page 138 U. S. 318
further appeared that, in addition to the old mortgages
previously described, there were two other encumbrances that were
either in whole or in part charges upon the estate of the infant,
and which amounted to $15,000 and interest, and that the money in
his hands, of the former loan, would be needed for the buildings on
lot 6, and more was needed to erect the building on the rear of
that lot and to pay off said encumbrances. His petition showed
"that the entire estate of the said Henry W. Kingsbury consists
of real estate, nearly all situate in the City of Chicago, and the
only revenue and income of said estate to meet the various charges
and encumbrances upon it and its expenses and taxation must be
derived from the rental of said real estate; that no revenue can,
in his judgment and that of judicious persons with whom he has
consulted, be derived from the said rear portion of said lot 6
unless the same be improved; that the said premises have
heretofore, as thus improved, been largely productive and
profitable until the said improvements were destroyed by fire, and
it is believed that, if judiciously built upon, as proposed, they
would be again equally productive and profitable, if not more
so."
He therefore asked authority to negotiate an additional loan of
$75,000 in gold coin or the equivalent thereof in paper currency of
the United States, paying usual and reasonable commissions and
brokerage therefor, upon such terms and for such time as the court
would approve and the law allowed, and to secure the same by
mortgage upon certain described premises.
The prayer of that petition was also granted, and an order was
made authorizing a further loan of $75,000 in gold coin, or its
equivalent in paper currency, upon the terms stated in the
petition. Under this order, the mortgage of April 1, 1873, was
executed to secure the payment of $70,000 in gold coin borrowed by
the guardian from the mortgage company, and for which amount the
guardian gave his bond maturing April 1, 1883, payable with
interest (evidenced by coupons signed by him as guardian) at the
rate of nine percent per annum, payable half-yearly in like coin,
until the principal sum was fully paid. This mortgage does not seem
to have been formally
Page 138 U. S. 319
presented to the court for examination, but the fact of its
execution was brought to its attention in the guardian's reports
from time to time of the condition of the estate, and was
recognized.
On the 12th of October, 1876, the guardian, who at that time was
Herman G. Powers, presented to the county court a petition showing
a large indebtedness against the minor's estate, arising in part
from the erection of buildings upon the lots before referred to,
and including $51,987.04 in gold, which he stated was due the
United States Mortgage Company for unpaid interest up to August 15,
1876. For the purpose of discharging said indebtedness, he asked
authority to make an additional loan in gold of a sum not exceeding
$95,000, or its equivalent in paper currency of the United States,
paying interest thereon at the rate of nine percent per annum in
gold. The authority asked was granted, and the amount above named
having been negotiated with the appellant, he executed a mortgage
December 1, 1876, to secure the payment of that sum in gold coin on
the 1st of December, 1883, with interest (evidenced by coupons
signed by him as guardian) payable half-yearly in like coin at the
rate of nine percent per annum until the principal sum was paid,
the guardian giving his bond for the principal sum and coupons for
the interest. The mortgage, bonds, and coupons, having been
submitted to the court, were examined and approved.
Upon the basis of the master's report, the aggregate amount due
on the 15th day of December, 1885, was $343,399.96. This amount was
reduced by the final decree to the sum of $221,727.64, making a
difference against the company at that date of $121,672.32.
The following extract from the final decree shows how this
result was reached:
"And the court finds that there was due the complainant, October
15, 1884, of principal and interest on the loans made by said Anson
Sperry as guardian, calculating interest at nine percent per annum
from the time to which the interest on said loans had been paid or
funded and secured by the mortgage executed by the said Powers, the
following sums, to-wit: "
Page 138 U. S. 320
Principal of first loan . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$175,000.00
Interest at nine percent from November
1, 1876, to October 15, 1884. . . . . . . . . . 125,343.75
Principal of second loan. . . . . . . . . . . . . 70,000.00
Interest at nine percent from April 1,
1877, to October 15, 1884 . . . . . . . . . . . 47,512.50
-----------
Making a total of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $417,856.25
===========
And the court finds and the master's
report shows payments to the
complainant, made October 15, 1884, and
previously, to the amount of. . . . . . . . . . $302,568.17
And that said Powers improperly paid
to said complainant the sum of $370.57
as interest on coupons secured by
said 1st and 2d mortgages, which sum
should be charged to complainant. . . . . . . . 370.57
-----------
Total payments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $302,938.74
===========
Leaving a balance due October 15, 1884,
on said first two loans of. . . . . . . . . . . $114,917.51
The interest upon which at nine percent
to December 15, 1885, is. . . . . . . . . . . . 12,066.33
-----------
Leaving a balance due on the first
two loans at that date. . . . . . . . . . . . . $126,983.84
===========
And the court finds that the principal
of said third mortgage made by
Heman G. Powers should be reduced
by deducting the amount of interest
on coupons included therein, or
$7,219.37, leaving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $87,780.73
And that the complainant should be allowed
as interest thereon to December 15, 1885,
the sum of. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,963.07
-----------
Making a total of principal and interest
due on said mortgage of . . . . . . . . . . $94,743.80
===========
Which, added to the sum due on said first two
mortgages, makes a total of . . . . . . . . . . $221,727.64
due the complainant on all three of said mortgages December 15,
1885.
Page 138 U. S. 321
The calculation of interest was made to December 15, 1885,
because on that day the court below filed an opinion sustaining the
defendants' exceptions to the master's report so far as it allowed
(1) interest on coupons after their maturity; (2) interest on
coupons of the first and second loans included in the third
mortgage, and (3) interest on the third loan at the rate of nine
percent.
The assignment of error questions the correctness of the ruling
on the exceptions, but makes no distinct point as to interest at
the contract rate having been calculated to December 15, 1885,
rather than to the date of the entry of the final decree passed on
the 23d of March, 1886.
Page 138 U. S. 325
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. In the court below, one of the contentions of the appellee
Kingsbury, who reached his majority before the final decree, and
became a defendant, was that the guardian had no authority to
borrow moneys for the purpose of erecting buildings to be rented,
or to mortgage the minor's property to secure the payment of moneys
borrowed for that or any other purpose; that no such authority
could be conferred by the county court, and consequently that the
mortgages were absolutely void. The circuit court did not concur in
this view. It held the mortgages to be valid instruments to secure
the payment of whatever amount was legally and justly due upon an
accounting. The reduction of the amount reported arose from the
disapproval of the mode in which the master computed interest on
the several debts.
The contention that the mortgages were unauthorized by law is
renewed in this Court, and, although the mortgage company alone has
prosecuted an appeal, Kingsbury insists that even if the mode
adopted by the circuit court for computing interest was erroneous,
the decree cannot be reversed
Page 138 U. S. 326
if this Court finds that the mortgages were void for want of
authority in the guardian to execute them. As the present appeal
necessarily brings before us the defense based upon the alleged
invalidity of the mortgages -- a defense that questions the right
to a foreclosure for any amount -- it is necessary to inquire at
the outset whether, by the law of Illinois, the guardian had
authority to mortgage the real estate of his ward to secure the
payment of moneys borrowed to be used in improving the ward's
property or to discharge existing mortgages upon it.
By the Constitution of Illinois, county courts are courts of
record with original jurisdiction in the appointment of guardians
and the settlement of their accounts, and with such other
jurisdiction as may be given by general law. Article V, sec. 18.
And by the Act of the General Assembly relating to guardians and
wards, approved April 10, 1872, Rev.Stats.Illinois, 1874, c. 64, it
is provided (§§ 2, 4) that a guardian shall have, under
the direction of the county court, "the custody, nurture, and
tuition of his ward, and the care and management of his estate,"
although, under some circumstances, the custody of the person, as
well as the education of the minor, would be committed to the
father or mother. By the same statute it is provided that the
guardian
"shall manage the estate of his ward frugally and without waste,
and apply the income and profit thereof, so far as the same may be
necessary, to the comfort and suitable support and education of his
ward,"
and "shall educate his ward." §§ 19, 20. It is made
his duty by § 22
"to put and keep his ward's money at interest, upon security to
be approved by the court, or invest the same in United States
bonds, or other United States interest-bearing securities,"
all loans in amounts exceeding $100 to be upon real estate
security, but no loan to be for a longer time than three years, nor
beyond the minority of the ward. He
"may [§ 23] lease the real estate of the ward upon such
terms and upon such length of time, not extending beyond the
minority of the ward, as the county court shall approve."
So also (§ 24) he
"may, by leave of the county court, mortgage the real estate of
the ward for a term of years not exceeding
Page 138 U. S. 327
the minority of the ward, or in fee, but the time of the
maturity of the indebtedness secured by such mortgage shall not be
extended beyond the time of the minority of the ward."
But (§ 25)
"before any mortgage shall be made, the guardian shall petition
the county court for an order authorizing such mortgage to be made,
in which petition shall be set out the condition of the estate, and
the facts and circumstances on which the petition is founded, and a
description of the premises sought to be mortgaged."
The statute also declares (§ 26)
"that foreclosures of mortgages authorized by this act shall
only be made by petition to the county court of the county where
letters of guardianship were granted, or, in case of nonresident
minors, in the county in which the premises, or some part thereof,
are situated, in which proceeding the guardian and ward shall be
made defendants, and any sale made by virtue of any order or decree
of foreclosure of such mortgage may at any time before confirmation
be set aside by the court for inadequacy of price or other good
cause, and shall not be binding upon the guardian or ward until
confirmed by the court,"
and (§ 27)
"that no decree of strict foreclosure shall be made upon any
such mortgage, but redemption shall be allowed, as is provided by
law in cases of sales under executions upon common law
judgments."
Power is given to the county court (§ 28)to order
"the sale of the real estate of the ward for his support and
education, when the court shall deem it necessary, or to invest the
proceeds in other real estate, or for the purpose of otherwise
investing the same,"
upon the verified petition of the guardian, filed at least ten
days before the commencement of the term of court at which the
application shall be made, and setting forth "the condition of the
estate and the facts and circumstances on which the petition is
founded." Of the application to sell, notice must be given (§
31) by publication to all persons concerned, and tried "as in other
cases in chancery." Any order made or judgment rendered under the
act may be reviewed upon appeal to the circuit court (§ 43),
the appellant giving such bond and security as the court directs.
The statute contains many other sections, but those
Page 138 U. S. 328
referred to are all that have any bearing, directly or
indirectly, upon the questions raised in the present case.
It is clear from the statement of the proceedings in the county
court that in each instance of borrowing, the guardian's petition
for an order authorizing the loan and mortgage set out the
condition of the estate, the facts and circumstances on which it
was founded, and a description of the premises sought to be
mortgaged, and the maturity of the debt incurred by borrowing did
not extend beyond the minority of the ward. §§ 24, 25.
The petition in form met all the requirements of the statute.
The question of the validity of the mortgages is within a very
narrow compass, depending as it does upon statutory provisions so
clearly expressed as to leave but little room for construction. The
statute, by secs. 4 and 19, commits to the guardian, under the
direction of the county court, the care and management of the
ward's estate, and makes it his duty to manage it frugally and
without waste, applying the income and profit therefrom, so far as
may be necessary, to the comfort and suitable support as well as
the education of the ward. It is also made his duty to put and keep
the ward's money at interest. Now it is clear that the proper
management of the ward's estate involves something more than his
maintenance and education. It involves the payment of taxes, and
may involve the payment of assessments, insurance premiums, and
mortgages as well as the repairing of buildings, and in order that
the interests of the ward may be guarded and promoted in every
emergency arising in the management of his estate, the statute
empowers the guardian, with the leave of the county court, to
lease, mortgage, or sell his real property. While the statute
(§ 28) defines the objects for which his real property may be
sold, it is silent as to the circumstances under which the guardian
may lease or mortgage it. Nevertheless the power to lease or
mortgage is expressly given. For what purposes may the power to
mortgage be exerted? One of the learned counsel for Kingsbury
insists that the guardian cannot borrow money for any purpose or
under any circumstances. If this view be sound, it
Page 138 U. S. 329
would result that he could not borrow money to pay taxes, or
insurance premiums, or for necessary repairs upon buildings, or to
discharge mortgages, even when that mode of raising money is
absolutely required by the best interests of the estate. We cannot
suppose that any such result was within the contemplation of the
legislature when it imposed upon the guardian the duty to care for
and manage the ward's estate, under the direction of the county
court, and empowered him, with the leave of that court, to mortgage
real property for debts maturing on or before the ward's majority.
If the guardian could not, with such leave, borrow money upon
mortgage of real estate to discharge existing encumbrances, pay
taxes, insurance premiums, and assessments, or to make necessary
repairs, in what mode could it be raised by him? If he could only
sell with the leave of the court real property for the particular
purposes named in the twenty-eighth section -- namely, for the
support and education of the ward, or to invest the proceeds in
other real estate, or to invest them otherwise, in what way, when
he was without sufficient income from the estate -- could money be
raised to discharge existing mortgages, pay taxes, insurance
premiums, assessments, or to make repairs? The answer to his
question suggests that the construction sought to be places upon
the statute is too narrow. We are of opinion that the legislature
intended to commit the whole subject of mortgaging the real estate
of the ward primarily to the guardian, subject to certain
restrictions, some of which are expressed in the statute, while
others are necessarily implied from its provisions. The express
restrictions are first that he obtain the leave of the county
court, based upon petition setting out the condition of the estate,
the facts and circumstances of which the petition is founded, and a
description of the premises to be mortgaged; second, that the
mortgage, if not in fee, must be for a term of years not extending
beyond the minority of the ward; third, that the time of the
maturity of the indebtedness secured by it should not extend beyond
the minority of the ward. §§ 24, 25. The implied
restriction controlling the discretion and power both of the
guardian and the county court is that the
Page 138 U. S. 330
indebtedness secured by the mortgage must arise out of and have
some necessary or appropriate connection with the management of the
ward's estate. We have seen that the express restrictions imposed
by the statute were all observed in the proceedings in the county
court. It is equally clear that the debts created by the borrowing
of money from the mortgage company arose out of and had connection
with the proper management of the ward's estate. When the buildings
upon Kingsbury's lots were destroyed by fire in 1871, the question
naturally occurred whether it was prudent or for the benefit of the
ward that the lots be sold and the proceeds invested in other real
estate or in securities, or whether the buildings destroyed should
not be replaced and other lots belonging to the ward improved. It
was the duty of the guardian, as well as of the county court, when
informed of the situation, to consider those questions, because
they were involved in the management of the estate. If the guardian
had not taken such action as his best judgment indicated, he would
have been neglectful of his duty. At any rate, these questions were
in the first instance for him and for the county court, and their
determination of them in the mode prescribed by the statute was
subject to be reviewed, upon appeal, in the circuit court.
This interpretation does not recognize as belonging to the
guardian and to the county court any larger powers than they have
by the express words of the statute in respect to the disposition
by sale of the real estate of the ward. Before the fire of 1871, it
was competent for him, with the leave of the county court, to sell
even the improved property of the ward in Chicago for the purpose
of investing the proceeds in other real estate, improved or
unimproved, or of otherwise investing them. For like purposes, and
with the leave of that court, he could have sold the lots after the
buildings were destroyed by fire. But no such sales should have
been made if they could have been avoided, nor if, in the judgment
of the guardian and of the county court, looking to the probable
future of Chicago, it was best to replace the buildings destroyed,
and to improve lots not theretofore occupied by buildings. It
Page 138 U. S. 331
is asked why did not the guardian lease the property, and thus
avoid the expense of rebuilding? As leases could not extend beyond
the minority of the ward, it may be that the property could not
have been advantageously leased for a short term of years, or a
sufficient amount raised in that mode to meet the unpaid and
constantly accruing taxes, as well as the existing mortgages upon
the property about to be foreclosed. Be this as it may, and
independently of these considerations, it is sufficient to say that
the question of lease, mortgage, or sale was, under the statute,
for the determination of the guardian and the county court. The
power to sell real estate for the purpose of investing the proceeds
in other real estate, improved or unimproved, or of lending them
upon real estate security, is not, looking at its nature or the
consequences to result from its exercise, less important than the
power to borrow money, secured by mortgage, to improve the ward's
real property. If the former may be determined by the guardian and
the county court, as the statute expressly declares it may be, we
do not feel at liberty to hold that the latter may not be also
determined by them, especially as the power to mortgage is given
without any restriction other than such as is necessarily
implied.
It is also suggested by counsel for Kingsbury that if a guardian
may, under any circumstances or for any purpose, borrow money and
mortgage the real property of the ward to secure its payment, he
can only do so when thereunto authorized by the circuit court of
the proper county exercising the usual powers of a court of
chancery. We cannot perceive anything in the statute to sustain
this interpretation. It may be that the circuit court of the proper
county, in virtue of its general equity jurisdiction and in a suit
brought in behalf of the ward by the guardian, could have
authorized the latter to borrow money to improve the ward's real
property, and give a mortgage to secure payment of the amount
borrowed. It was held in
Smith v. Sackett, 5 Gilman 534,
545, that
"the jurisdiction of a court of chancery to order the sale of
the whole or a portion of the estate of an infant, or to order it
encumbered by mortgage whenever the interests of the infant
demand
Page 138 U. S. 332
it, will not be denied, whether that interest be of a legal or
equitable nature."
And in
Allman v. Taylor, 101 Ill. 185, 191, the
jurisdiction of the circuit court sitting in equity, in a suit
brought in the name of the infant by his guardian, to order the
sale of the minor's unimproved lands in Illinois, that the proceeds
might be applied in removing encumbrances on his improved land in
Indiana, was sustained upon the principle announced in
Smith v.
Sackett. See also Frith v. Cameron, L.R. 12 Eq. 169.
But it does not follow that the statute of 1872 did not confer like
jurisdiction upon the county court. That court, we have seen, is by
the state constitution a court of record and of original
jurisdiction in the appointment of guardians and the settlements of
their accounts. It has also by the statute general authority over
the matters committed to it by the statute of 1872.
It is further contended that if the county court could authorize
the execution of mortgages to secure the payment of money borrowed,
the mortgages in suit are not of that class, because the act of
1872 provides that the mortgages executed under it shall be
foreclosed only upon petition in the county court, and that no
strict foreclosure shall be made, but that redemption shall be
allowed, as is now provided by law, in cases of sales under
execution upon common law judgments (§§ 26, 27), whereas
the mortgages executed by Kingsbury's guardian authorize an
absolute sale, and did not expressly recognize the right of
redemption after sale. The declaration in the statute that
foreclosures authorized by it shall only be made by petition to the
county court, granting the letters of guardianship, was not
intended to exclude -- indeed, it could not have excluded -- the
jurisdiction in such cases of the circuit court of the United
States if that court would otherwise have jurisdiction.
Davis
v. James, 2 F. 618. It had reference only to the courts of the
state, and to the mode of foreclosing mortgages in the county
court. Upon the other point, in respect to the right of redemption
it need only be said that it was not necessary to the validity of
the mortgage that it should expressly reserve the right of
redemption. That right is given by the statute, and is recognized
by the circuit
Page 138 U. S. 333
court of the United States, sitting in Illinois, as a rule of
property, and was so recognized in the final decree in this case.
The decree expressly provides, in conformity with the law of
Illinois and the rules adopted in the court below, that the
purchaser shall receive a deed only after the expiration of fifteen
months from the date of the sale.
Connecticut Mut. Life Ins.
Co. v. Cushman, 108 U. S. 51.
Again it is insisted that if the county court had power under
the statute to authorize these mortgages, it could not authorize
them without proof that such course was necessary for the
preservation of the minor's estate, or at the very least that the
estate would thereby be benefited. If such an objection as this can
be urged in defense of a suit to foreclose the mortgages or for the
purpose of impeaching their validity, it is met by the fact that
the record of this case fails to show that the county court made
the orders authorizing the execution of the mortgages without full
proof as to the necessity or propriety of making them. The statute
does not require that the petition to the county court for leave to
mortgage shall be supported by any particular amount of proof, nor
prevent the court from acting upon its personal knowledge of the
facts. The orders showing the leave of the county court to make the
mortgages in suit are entirely consistent with a thorough
investigation of the facts by that court in some appropriate form
before the orders were made. Those orders recite that the court,
upon examining the guardian's petition, was sufficiently advised in
the premises. Even without such recital and in the absence of
anything to the contrary, it must be assumed that the court, if
required by law to hear formal proof of the allegations in the
verified petition of the guardian, discharged its whole duty.
At the argument it was contended by the appellant that the
question of the validity of the mortgages in suit was concluded in
its favor by
Kingsbury v. Powers, 131 Ill. 182, 192, where
it was held that the guardian was entitled to credit for the
amounts paid to the United States Mortgage Company for interest.
One of the contentions there was that the county court had no power
to authorize a guardian to borrow money
Page 138 U. S. 334
for the purpose of erecting new and costly buildings upon
unimproved real estate, and that therefore the money so borrowed,
upon which interest was paid, was borrowed without authority of
law, and imposed no obligation whatever upon the estate of the
ward. The court, referring to this contention, said
"that under certain circumstances, the probate court [which had
succeeded to the jurisdiction of the county court], exercising a
chancery power in that respect,
Bond v. Lockwood, 33 Ill.
213, is empowered to authorize a guardian to borrow money under
circumstances, as for instance for the prevention of irreparable
injury to the estate, is clear. And our statute expressly
authorizes that court to empower the guardian to mortgage the real
estate.
See Rev.Stats. 1874, c. 64, §§ 24, 25,
etc. The several steps pointed out by those sections were pursued
in this instance in obtaining the decree. There was therefore
authority in that tribunal to adjudicate, and at most its orders
were erroneous only, and not void. Until reversed on appeal or set
aside by some appropriate proceeding, they were binding, and it was
therefore incumbent on the guardian to pay the interest
accumulating upon the indebtedness."
There is certainly some ground for the appellant's contention
that this decision in effect sustains the power of the guardian,
with the leave of the county court, to borrow money to improve his
ward's real property and secure its payment by mortgage, for it
would seem that the order of the county court would have been not
simply erroneous, but void if the statute did not, under any
circumstances, authorize the borrowing of money to erect new
buildings upon the unimproved real property of the ward, and to pay
off existing mortgage encumbrances. It is, however, proper to say
that
Kingsbury v. Powers, as well as
Kingsbury v.
Sperry, 119 Ill. 279, have been treated as not directly
deciding the precise question before us in respect to the validity
of the mortgages in suit, and in the absence of any direct
determination by the supreme court of the state, we have given the
statute that construction which in our judgment is required by its
provisions. We hold, in accordance with the views of the circuit
court, that the mortgages, and
Page 138 U. S. 335
therefore the bonds in suit, were not invalid for want of
authority in law for their execution by the guardian, acting under
the direction of the county court.
We pass to the examination of questions relating to interest,
and to the mode of computing it.
2. The appellant is a corporation of New York, created by
special act passed May 12, 1871. It is authorized by its charter
(§ 2)
"to lend money on bond and mortgage on real estate situated
within the United States, or upon any hypothecation of such real
estate, or upon hypothecation of bonds and mortgages on such real
estate for any period of credit, and repayable by annuity or
otherwise."
Its loans on mortgage or hypothecation (§ 16) "may be made
to individuals, corporations, associations, states, cities,
provinces, and towns, or other municipal bodies authorized
thereto." Its charter also provides (§ 21) that "no loan shall
be made, directly or indirectly, to any director or officer of the
company, nor shall any loan or advance of money be made at a rate
of interest exceeding the legal rate." The highest rate of interest
permitted by the general laws of New York to be contracted for at
the time the loans in question were made was seven percent. The
same laws provided that no person or corporation should directly or
indirectly take or receive interest at a greater rate. 2
Rev.Stats.N.Y., Part 2, Title 3, §§ 1, 2, vol. 2, 6th ed.
p. 1164; vol. 4, 8th ed. p. 2512. By the statutes of Illinois in
force when the bonds and mortgages in suit were given, it was
lawful for parties to stipulate for interest at the rate of ten
percent per annum or any less rate. 1 Gross' Stats.Illinois 371,
§ 10; 3
ib. 244, § 4.
It is contended that the appellant, although having express
authority by its charter to lend money on bond and mortgage of real
estate "situated within the United States," could not contract in
Illinois for the highest rate of interest allowed by that state,
but was limited to a rate of interest not exceeding that
established by the state under whose laws it was created a
corporation, and therefore it cannot, in the accounting, be allowed
more than seven percent interest upon the principal sum. We concur
with the court below in holding this position
Page 138 U. S. 336
to be untenable. Reasonably construed, the appellant's charter
authorized it to contract for such rate of interest as was lawful
in the state where the contract of loan was made and where the
property mortgaged to secure the loan was situated. The general
statute of New York had for its object to regulate the rate of
interest upon loans there made, and not the rate upon loans made
elsewhere. That state did not assume to fix the maximum of
compensation to be paid to the lender for the use of money in other
states. What compensation is fair or just for the use of money
borrowed cannot well be determined upon principles applicable alike
to all parts of the country. The risk is much greater for the
lender, and the amount the borrower can reasonably pay is larger,
in some localities than in others. Laws regulating the rate of
interest necessarily depend upon the condition of the people in the
particular states or communities enacting them. Such laws express
the policy of the respective states upon that subject. When New
York created the mortgage company, with power to loan money upon
real estate anywhere within the United States, and prohibited it
from lending money at a rate of interest "exceeding the legal
rate," it did not intend to withhold from it the power to contract
in other states for interest upon moneys loaned upon terms less
favorable than those states permitted in respect to loans there
made by other corporations, and by individuals. The legal rate
referred to in the appellant's charter is the rate established by
the law of the place where the contract of loan is made. This view
is supported by those decisions in New York which hold, in respect
to loans made in other states, that the rate of interest allowed by
the state where the contract of loan is made will be respected by
the courts of New York although such rate is in excess of that
fixed by its own laws, and although, in some of the cases, one of
the parties to the contract, the lender, was a resident of that
state.
Sheldon v. Haxtun, 91 N.Y. 124;
Wayne County
Savings Bank v. Low, 81 N.Y. 566;
Pratt v. Adams, 7
Paige 615.
See also Tilden v.
Blair, 21 Wall. 241, and
Scudder v. Union Nat.
Bank, 91 U. S. 406,
91 U. S.
412.
3. The next question to be considered is whether the overdue
Page 138 U. S. 337
coupons drew interest. The master allowed interest thereon after
maturity at the statutory rate of six percent per annum, but the
circuit court held that interest upon interest was
inadmissible.
By the statutes of Illinois in force when these loans were made
-- indeed, ever since 1845 -- it was provided that
"Creditors shall be allowed to receive [interest] at the rate of
six percent per annum for all moneys after they become due on any
bond, bill, promissory note, or other instrument of writing,"
although under other statutory provisions parties might
stipulate for or agree upon ten percent or any less rate, "for
money loaned or in any manner due and owing from any person or
corporation to any other person or corporation in that state."
Rev.Stats.Ill. 1845, p. 294; 1 Gross' Stats.Ill. 370, c. 54; 3
Gross' Stats.Ill. 243; 1 Starr & Curtis Stats. 1356;
Rev.Stats.Ill. 1874, p. 614.
The bond given by the guardian on the first loan, dated July 10,
1872, provided for the payment of
"the principal sum of $175,000, in gold coin of the United
States, on the 1st day of May, 1882, with interest for the same, to
be computed from the day of the date hereof at the rate of nine
percentum per annum, in like gold coin, which said interest shall
be paid half-yearly, to-wit, on the first day of each of the months
of November and May from and after the date hereof, which will be
in each and every year until the said principal sum shall be fully
paid, which said interest payments, until the said principal sum
shall become due, are specified in and further secured by twenty
coupons given herewith. . . . But this bond is not intended to bind
said Anson Sperry personally, or his personal estate, but to bind
him as such guardian, and the estate of the said minor, Henry W.
Kingsbury, [of] which he is guardian as aforesaid."
These provisions were also contained in the mortgage given to
secure the payment of the bond. The coupons of this bond were also
signed by the guardian, and were in the following form:
"Due the United States Mortgage Company, $_____, on the first
day of _____, 18__, in gold coin of the united states, payable at
such place in the City of Chicago, in the State of Illinois, as the
United States Mortgage Company,
Page 138 U. S. 338
their successors, legal representatives, or assigns shall in
writing from time to time appoint, and in default of such
appointment, then at the agency of said company in the said City of
Chicago, being for the payment of an installment of interest due on
that day on my bond to the said United States Mortgage Company of
this date, conditioned for the payment in gold coin of the United
States of $_____, with semiannual interest at nine percent per
annum on the whole sum from time to time remaining unpaid, in gold
coin of the United States, said bond being made to secure a loan
made to me in like gold coin."
The bonds, mortgages, and coupons executed for the other two
loans contained similar provisions.
Each contract of loan was made and was to be performed in
Illinois, and each bond provides that it is to be construed by the
laws of Illinois. Interest upon interest, as represented by the
coupons, must therefore be allowed or disallowed as may be required
by the law of that state. In Illinois, the whole subject is
regulated by statute, and interest cannot be recovered unless the
statute authorizes it.
Sammis v. Clark, 13 Ill. 544, 546;
Phinney v. Baldwin, 16 Ill. 108;
Aldrich v.
Dunham, 16 Ill. 404;
Pekin v. Reynolds, 31 Ill. 529,
532;
Illinois Central Railroad v. Cobb, 72 Ill. 148, 152;
Chicago v. Allcock, 86 Ill. 384;
Ohio v. Frank,
103 U. S. 697.
The precise question before us is whether the interest provided
for in the bonds and mortgages in suit, and further evidenced by
coupons, drew interest after maturity, in virtue of the above
statute allowing interest at the rate of six percent per annum "for
all moneys after they become due on any bond, bill, promissory
note, or other instrument of writing." The scope and effect of this
statute have been considered by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
numerous cases, which have been the subject of extended discussion
by counsel.
Walker v. Hadduck, 14 Ill. 399;
Heiman v.
Schroeder, 74 Ill. 158, and
Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v.
Gould, 80 Ill. 388, referred to by appellant, and the recent
case of
Heissler v. Stose, 131 Ill. 393, 397, hold
respectively that installments of rent due on a written lease,
installments due on
Page 138 U. S. 339
a written contract for building, and the amount due on a policy
of insurance, are moneys due on instruments of writing, and
therefore, by the statute, draw interest after maturity. These
cases do not bear directly upon the question of interest upon
interest, for the moneys due in them were principal sums. Interest
upon such sums is in no sense interest upon interest. In
McFadden v. Fortier, 20 Ill. 509, 516, a proceeding by
scire facias to foreclose a mortgage given to secure
promissory notes, each for a definite principal sum to be paid at a
named date "with six percent interest," the court said that the
rule for casting interest on notes, bonds, etc., upon which partial
payments have been made was to apply such payments to keep down the
interest, "but the interest is never allowed to form a part of the
principal so as to carry interest."
Leonard v. Villars, 23 Ill. 377, much relied on by the
appellee, was a suit to foreclose a mortgage given to secure four
promissory notes which, upon their face, were made payable
respectively in one, two, three, and four years from date, with
interest at the rate of ten percent per annum, "the interest to be
paid annually in advance." Only the first year's interest was paid
in advance. In relation to the computation of interest, the court
said:
"To compute interest upon interest after its maturity has, by
all courts, whether exercising equity or common law jurisdiction,
been held to be compound interest, and in violation of law. This
question is one that has been frequently presented and it is
believed as uniformly held to be unauthorized. We are not aware of
any well considered case which has held that there is an implied
legal or moral obligation to pay interest upon interest after its
maturity. The court below erred in computing interest after it fell
due."
This case was referred to in
Barker v. International
Bank, 80 Ill. 96, which was a suit to foreclose a deed of
trust given to secure the payment of a promissory note on a named
day, "with interest at the rate of six percent." The court
said:
"No payments having been made upon the note, the interest should
have been computed from the date of the note until the rendition of
the decree, and added to the principal, and a decree rendered for
that
Page 138 U. S. 340
amount. It was expressly decided by this Court in
Leonard v.
Villars, 23 Ill. 377, that it was error to compute interest
upon interest. The rule there announced must control here."
P. 101.
In
Dulaney v. Payne, 101 Ill. 325, 331, which was an
action of assumpsit for the principal amount due on a promissory
note payable at a named date, "with ten percent interest from date,
interest payable semiannually," a previous judgment obtained in a
separate action for an installment of interest was pleaded in bar,
but the court held the plea to be bad upon the ground that the note
contained two distinct contracts, one to pay the principal and the
other the interest, and that a separate action could be maintained
after the maturity of interest to recover such interest only. The
same principle had been announced in
Walker v. Kimball, 22
Ill. 537, and was repeated in
Wehrly v. Morfoot, 103 Ill.
183, 186, and in
McDole v. McDole, 106 Ill. 452, 459.
Thayer v. Star Mining Company, 105 Ill. 541, was a suit
for the specific performance of a contract for the sale of real
estate, in which there was a question as to the computation of
interest on the amount of promissory notes maturing at named dates,
each "with interest payable annually." The court said:
"It is true that compound interest will not be allowed in the
absence of an agreement to pay it, but after interest has accrued
due, it may by agreement between the parties be turned into
principal, and made to bear interest for delay of payment."
See also Haworth v. Huling, 87 Ill. 23;
McGovern v.
Union Mut. Life Ins. Co., 109 Ill. 151, 156, and
Gilmore
v. Bissell, 124 Ill. 488.
In none of these cases were there separate coupons or warrants
representing the stipulated interest. But
Harper v. Ely,
70 Ill. 581, 586 (
Harper v. Ely, 56 Ill. 179), and
Humphreys v. Morton, 100 Ill. 592, were of that class.
Harper v. Ely involved a question as to interest evidenced
by coupons of a bond secured by a trust deed. The court said:
"The coupons provide for the payment of a definite sum of money
at a specified time. They are in writing, and in effect are
promissory notes, and we are aware of no reason why interest
Page 138 U. S. 341
should not be computed upon them after they became due.
Gelpcke v. City of
Dubuque, 1 Wall. 206;
Hollingsworth v. City of
Detroit, 3 McLean 472;
Dunlap v. Wiseman, 2 Disney
398."
Humphreys v. Morton was a suit to foreclose mortgages
given by a railroad company to secure bonds, with interest warrants
attached, which it had issued. The warrants were in the following
form:
"$35. Peoria, Pekin and Jacksonville Railroad Company. Interest
warrant for thirty-five dollars, payable at the Importers' and
Traders' Bank of the City of New York on the first day of _____,
18__, for six months' interest on bond No. ___. L. Chapman, Jr.,
Secretary."
The court said:
"That interest was properly allowed and computed on this
instrument is settled by
Harper v. Ely, 70 Ill. 581, and
the cases there referred to, and reference may also be made to
Clark v.
Iowa City, 20 Wall. 583;
Genoa v.
Woodruff, 92 U. S. 502, and
Amy v.
Dubuque, 98 U. S. 473, holding the
same doctrine."
So, in the late case of
Benneson v. Savage, 130 Ill.
352, 367, it was said that
"the executing of a coupon is the executing of an instrument
which,
ex vi termini, bears interest after maturity, if no
rate is expressed, six percent; and at the date of executing these
coupons, any rate not exceeding ten percent might be fixed by
agreement of the parties."
Citing
Harper v. Ely and
Humphreys v.
Morton.
The case of
Leonard v. Villars, referred to with
approval in
Barker v. Bank, undoubtedly proceeds upon the
broad ground that the statute does not allow interest upon
interest, even where the instrument given for the payment of the
principal sum at a named date is a promissory note, and provides on
its face, but not also in separate coupons, for the payment of
interest at stated periods intermediate the date of the note and
the maturity of the principal sum. The question was much discussed
at the bar as to whether the doctrine of that case was modified by
later cases.
It is argued that, as a note or other written instrument
providing on its face for the payment of the principal debt, with
interest at named dates in advance of the maturity of the principal
sum, contains two distinct contracts, one to pay the
Page 138 U. S. 342
principal and the other to pay the interest,
Dulaney v.
Payne, Walker v. Kimball, and
Wehrly v. Morfoot,
above cited, such interest is as much money due on an instrument of
writing as if it were evidenced by separate coupons. But that
interpretation of the statute is scarcely consistent with
Leonard v. Villars, and we cannot assume that the Supreme
Court of Illinois has intended by its later decisions to overrule
the doctrine of that case.
Harper v. Ely, Humphreys v.
Morton, and
Benneson v. Savage decide nothing more
than that separate coupons, when they are in effect negotiable
promissory notes, and therefore instruments upon which the obligor
may be held personally liable for the amount named in them, draw
interest after maturity by virtue of the statute, and are
exceptions from the general rule announced in
Leonard v.
Villars. That such is the state of the local law is manifest
from the case of
Drury v. Wolfe, 25 N.E. 626, decided
since this cause was submitted. It was there said by Mr. Justice
Scholfield, speaking for the court:
"The general rule recognized by this Court is that parties
cannot be bound by any contract made before interest is due for the
payment of compound interest [citing, among other cases,
Leonard v. Villars;] . . . but, after interest is due, it
may, by agreement then made, be added to the principal and made to
thereafter bear interest. . . . There is perhaps an exception to
the rule as first above stated in the case of interest coupons
annexed to commercial paper. Such coupons bear interest.
Benneson v. Savage, 130 Ill. 352, and cases there cited.
But in such case, interest is not compounded indefinitely. Interest
is simply payable upon the amount of the face of the coupon, and
that the coupon bears interest is solely because of the character
given it by commercial usage.
Aurora v. West, 7 Wall.
105;
Mercer County v. Hackett, 1
Wall. 83;
Meyer v. Muscatine, 1 Wall.
384. There is therefore no authority in this for holding that
interest may be compounded indefinitely, or at all, in cases where
the payment of interest is not secured by some negotiable
instrument, independent of the instrument whereby the original
indebtedness is presumed to be paid."
The present case is controlled by the general rule that
Page 138 U. S. 343
interest upon interest will not be allowed, and is not within
the exception established by the recent cases in the Supreme Court
of Illinois. The coupons signed by the guardian, although
additional evidence of the interest agreed to be paid, are not
independent obligations, nor strictly commercial securities, upon
which he can be held liable, for, by the express contract between
the parties, recited in the bonds and mortgages, he and his estate
are exempt from all liability for the moneys borrowed. And as the
ward was not personally liable for these moneys, Story on Bills,
§§ 74, 75;
Forster v. Fuller, 6 Mass. 58; 1
Daniel on Nego.Instr. § 271; 1 Parsons on Notes & Bills
89-90, the bonds as well as the coupons were in effect payable out
of particular funds, and not absolutely and at all events as in the
case of commercial paper.
It results that the circuit court properly disallowed interest
upon interest.
4. It is said that the company agreed, during the progress of
the cause below, that interest be computed at nine percent until
the date of the appointment of Le Moyne as guardian of Kingsbury,
and at only 6 1/2 percent after that date, and that, as the sum
adjudged to the company was the precise sum due at the date of the
decree upon the above basis, the decree was for the right amount,
and ought not to be reversed even if the court below erred in
holding that coupons do not draw interest after maturity and that
the third mortgage embraced items that ought not to have been
included in it.
The facts out of which this contention arises are as
follows:
On the 20th of September, 1877, John v. Le Moyne became
Kingsbury's guardian in place of Powers, resigned, and, by an order
entered May 15, 1878, was directed to pay into court, for
investment in United States bonds, all sums secured by him as rents
subsequently to November 26, 1877, and thereafter pay into court,
on the first day of each month, all sums received by him, less such
sums as might be paid, under the order of the court, for the
support of the ward, and to meet other expenses. Le Moyne, December
2, 1878, filed an
Page 138 U. S. 344
answer impeaching the validity of the mortgages and denying the
right of the mortgage company to do business in Illinois. On the
18th of January, 1882, there was filed in court a written
stipulation, signed by the appellant's attorneys, which recited
that a large net income was being collected annually from the
ward's estate which could be applied to the reduction of whatever
claim the mortgage company may have, and that it had agreed to a
reduction of the rate of interest on the indebtedness claimed,
under the arrangement and on the terms and conditions in that
stipulation set forth. Those terms and conditions were as
follows:
"1. That if an order is made in said cause that the amount now
deposited in this court to the credit of said estate shall be forth
with paid to said United States Mortgage Company, and that
hereafter the income from said estate, after deducting all
necessary expenses of said property, shall be paid monthly to said
mortgage company, the said payments to be credited by said mortgage
company on any amount which may be ultimately found due to said
company from said estate, then the said United States Mortgage
Company agrees that, from the date of the appointment of said John
v. Le Moyne as guardian of said minor, the rate of interest on the
indebtedness claimed by said company shall be reduced from nine
percent per annum to six and one-half percent, said reduction being
made, however, upon the express condition that the payments above
provided for shall be made, and that the said minor shall, within
six months after his majority, pay to said mortgage company the
principal sums included in said mortgages, with interest thereon to
be computed (to the date of said Le Moyne's appointment as
guardian) at the rate and according to the terms of said mortgages,
and thereafter at said reduced rate, and upon the further express
condition that if said payments are not made as aforesaid, then
said company shall have the same right to proceed with the
foreclosure of said mortgages and to demand and collect the full
amount secured by said mortgages, according to their terms, and
without deduction from the rate of interest provided for in said
mortgages, and shall have the same rights in all respects under
said mortgages as if this
Page 138 U. S. 345
stipulation had not been made. 2. An order shall be entered in
said cause directing the payments to be made to said mortgage
company according to the terms of this stipulation, and this
stipulation shall take effect from the date of the entry of said
order."
On the same day, the court made an order which, after reciting
the pending motion of the complainant that the money deposited in
court by Le Moyne pursuant to the order of May 15, 1878, be paid to
it, and also the terms of the above stipulation, directed
"that all the money now in court in this cause, including
proceeds of bonds, to be converted by the clerk, amounting to a
total sum of sixty-one thousand nine hundred and sixty-nine dollars
and twenty cents, be paid to said complainant, less the clerk's
commissions of one percent, said clerk taking its receipt therefor,
and that hereafter said defendant Le Moyne pay to the said
complainant monthly the money required by said order of May 15,
1878, to be paid into court, and that he take the receipt of the
said complainant and file the same in lieu of the money with his
monthly report herein, and that all such sums of money so to be
paid to said complainant shall be paid on account of any
indebtedness which may ultimately be found by this Court to be due
to said complainant in this suit, without determining any of the
questions involved herein."
The monthly payments provided for in the stipulation were made
to the appellant up to September, 1884. On the 15th of October,
1884, Kingsbury having become of full age in December, 1883, there
was paid to he company out of the proceeds of a certain portion of
the mortgaged property released by it from the mortgages in suit,
the sum of $180,000. As evidence of that payment, a writing was
filed in court, signed by Kingsbury, by Le Moyne, his attorney in
fact, and by the mortgage company, which stated:
"The United States Mortgage Company has received from Henry W.
Kingsbury, by John V. Le Moyne, one hundred and eighty thousand
dollars, to be applied on any indebtedness or claim which may be
found due it from said Kingsbury in the above suit, and said
payment is made by said Kingsbury and received by said mortgage
company upon
Page 138 U. S. 346
the agreement that it shall not in any way operate or be
considered a waiver of any claim that either of said parties have
made or claimed, or may have or claim, in said suit, or in regard
to the subject matter thereof, it being expressly understood that
neither this nor any other payment received by said mortgage
company from said Henry W. Kingsbury shall be construed in any way
to be a waiver of the claim now made by said mortgage company; that
it is entitled to demand the full amount of the principal and
semiannual interest thereon at nine percent per annum, specified to
be paid by the terms of the original bonds and mortgages, held by
the said mortgage company."
On the second day of June, 1885, Kingsbury filed his separate
answer, in which, among other things, he denied that the county
court had ever authorized or could legally authorize the creation
of the loans, or the giving of the mortgages here in suit.
Subsequently, June 13, 1885, he filed a petition in the cause,
referring to the stipulation and order of January 18, 1882, the
payment to the appellant, under that order, of $65,730.40, and the
payment of the further sum of $60,598.97 up to September, 1884, and
stating that the mortgage company had refused to come to any
settlement with him unless he recognized the validity of the
mortgages, and allowed interest on the principal debts at nine
percent, although he was willing, while denying the validity of the
mortgages, that a decree be entered binding his property for the
actual cash received by his guardians, subject to all payments
made, with six percent interest; that the net income of the estate
was about $40,000, having nearly doubled since this action was
brought; that the then fair appraised value of the mortgaged
property was fully $800,000, and that LeMoyne had collected and had
in his hands $17,000 of income from the petitioner's property. The
prayer of his petition was that an order be entered directing Le
Moyne to pay over such moneys to him,
"and that the orders of May 15, 1878, and January 18, 1882, may
be discharged and declared to be of no effect as to the future
income of said property, and all other relief."
On the 28th of November, 1885, this application was heard,
Page 138 U. S. 347
and an order entered granting the prayer of the petition,
discharging the receiver, and directing him to forthwith deliver to
Kingsbury the possession and control of all the real estate,
buildings, personal property, and choses in action, money, books,
and papers in his hands or under his control. The order was made
upon certain conditions that do not affect the question now being
considered.
The contention of the appellee Kingsbury is that, under this
state of facts, the mortgage company cannot claim interest at a
greater rate than six percent after the date of the appointment of
Le Moyne as guardian. It is argued that the court, by its order of
January, 1882, accepted, for the benefit of the ward, the company's
offer to reduce the rate of interest, without assenting to the
express conditions imposed by the stipulation; that if the company
did not approve the order in the form in which it was entered, it
should have declined to receive the moneys then in the registry of
the court, which were directed to be paid to it, and that the
receiving of those moneys, as well as the monthly rents
subsequently accruing, was a waiver of the express conditions set
forth in the stipulation, and equivalent to an unconditional
agreement by the company to reduce the interest. We cannot assent
to this view. The court below certainly did not intend by the order
of January 18, 1882, to ignore the conditions upon which the
company's offer to reduce the rate of interest was based. It
intended, so far as it had the power, to put the ward in a position
in which he could, upon arriving at age, avail himself of the
proposed reduction of interest, and if Kingsbury had, within the
time specified in both the stipulation and the order, paid into
court the full amount of any balance due, allowing only six and a
half percentum interest after the date of Le Moyne's appointment as
guardian, the company's stipulation to reduce the interest could
perhaps have been enforced. But he chose not to perform the
required condition, but to take his chances of a favorable decision
of the cause upon the issues made by the pleadings. To that end, he
obtained the order setting aside that of January 18, 1882, as of no
effect, so that, before the final decree was made, the plan of
settlement,
Page 138 U. S. 348
indicated in the order of 1882 was repudiated by both parties
and by the court itself. The effect of the order of November 28,
1885, setting aside that of January 18, 1882, and giving Kingsbury
full control of the mortgaged property, of the moneys then in court
or thereafter to come from rents, even if that effect had not been
produced by the failure of Kingsbury to meet the condition to be
performed by him within six months after reaching his majority, was
to remit him and the company to whatever rights either had under
the original contracts of loan prior to the stipulation and order
of January 18, 1882. The construction placed upon the stipulation
and order of January 18, 1882, is in harmony with the rule,
supported by authority, that
"where a certain sum of money is due and the creditor enters
into arrangements with his debtor to take a lesser sum, provided
that sum is secured in a certain way and paid at a certain day, but
if any of the stipulations of the arrangement are not performed as
agreed upon, the creditor is to be entitled to recover the whole of
the original debt, such remitter to his original rights does not
constitute a penalty, and equity will not interfere to prevent its
observance."
2 White & Tudor's Leading Cases Eq., vol. 2, p. 2025;
Pomeroy's Eq. § 438;
Thompson v. Hudson, L.R. 4 H.L.
1; Coote on Mortgages, 4th ed. 883; Powell on Mortgages, 6th ed.
900; Adams on Equity, 7th ed. 109;
Reeves v. Stipp, 91
Ill. 609.
5. We come to consider the transaction of the third mortgage,
the one for $95,000 in gold. In the settlement of that loan, which
occurred December 19, 1876, the guardian received in money only
$41,805.73. The balance of $53,194.27 was paid (1) in overdue
coupons of the first and second loans, which were cancelled and
surrendered to the guardian, and (2) in the company's claim of
interest upon such overdue coupons at the rate of nine percent
after their maturity. The amount of this interest upon overdue
coupons was $7,219.27, which was disallowed, and the loan treated
as one in fact of $87,780.73 only. According to the views already
expressed, the company was not entitled, in the final computation,
to interest upon overdue coupons, after their maturity, even at
the
Page 138 U. S. 349
statutory rate of six percent per annum. The application to the
county court for leave to make the loan for $95,000 did not
indicate the purpose of the guardian, in the settlement of that
loan, to allow interest upon overdue coupons to be taken up by him.
No such question was passed upon by that court, and if its assent
would have authorized the guardian to pay such interest, no such
assent was given. Certainly the guardian could not, without leave
of the court, made an allowance of interest upon past-due coupons
that were not negotiable securities. The court below was therefore
right in treating the loan as one only of $87,870.73.
It is contended that this loan was usurious,
Peddicord v.
Connard, 85 Ill. 102;
Leonard v. Patton, 106 Ill. 99;
Ammondson v. Ryan, 111 Ill. 506, and that the whole
interest on it was for that reason forfeited under the statute of
Illinois which allows parties to stipulate for any rate of interest
for money loaned not exceeding ten percent per annum, but which
also provides:
"5. No person or corporation shall directly or indirectly accept
or receive, in money, goods, discounts, or thing in action, or in
any other way, any greater sum or greater value, for the loan,
forbearance, or discount of any money, goods, or thing in action,
than as above prescribed."
"6. If any person or corporation in this state shall contract to
receive a greater rate of interest or discount than 10 percent upon
any contract, verbal or written, such person or corporation shall
forfeit the whole of said interest so contracted to be received,
and shall be entitled only to recover the principal sum due to such
person or corporation."
The ground of this contention is that nine percent on $95,000
for the full term of the loan, seven years, $59,850, increased by
the $7,219.27 included in the principal sum, in all, $67,069.27,
would be in excess of ten percent interest for that term on the
amount really loaned by the company. We do not concur in the view
taken by the appellee. It the county court had authorized the
guardian, in the settlement of the $95,000 loan, to allow interest
upon interest and make the interest, thus increased, a principal
sum to draw interest, a different question would have been
presented, for it is the settled doctrine
Page 138 U. S. 350
of the Supreme Court of Illinois that an agreement made after
interest is due to make it a principal sum does not render the
transaction usurious.
Haworth v. Huling, 87 Ill. 23;
Thayer v. Star Mining Co., 105 Ill. 553;
McGovern v.
Union Mut. Life Ins. Co., 109 Ill. 151;
Gilmore v.
Bissell, 124 Ill. 488;
Drury v. Wolfe, 25 N.E. 626.
In the case of
Gilmore v. Bissell, above cited, the court
said:
"This was a bill to foreclose a mortgage. The only defense
relied upon is usury. . . . This note was secured by mortgage on
the premises in controversy. On the 28th day of August, 1878, no
interest having been paid on the note, Finley required the parties
to pay the debt or renew the note. They concluded to renew. In
computing the amount due, the agent of Finley charged on the
interest due, from the time it became due to the date of renewal,
interest at six percent per annum. This was added to the interest
due and the principal, which all amounted to the sum of $1,350, for
which a new note and mortgage were given. The interest on the
interest included in the mortgage amounted to $12.50, as is claimed
by the defendants. The addition of this amount to the debt, and the
agreement to pay it, it is insisted, rendered the transaction
usurious. We do not concur in this view. The mortgagors had agreed
to pay the interest on the mortgage debt annually, and it was their
duty to observe that agreement; but they had failed to pay as the
interest each year became due. When the time, however, came to
renew the debt, the mortgagors had the right, if they saw proper,
to redeem their agreement and pay interest on the interest, and
their agreement to pay that interest was not illegal, nor did it
render the transaction usurious. What was done was but the
performance of a contract made by the parties, which they had the
right to do. If authority was needed to sustain the view of the
circuit and appellate courts,
Haworth v. Huling, 87 Ill.
23, is conclusive of the question made."
But the county court did not authorize the guardian of Kingsbury
to allow interest upon interest when making the settlement in
respect to the third loan. It only authorized him to borrow $95,000
in gold, or its equivalent in currency. But on the
Page 138 U. S. 351
settlement of the loan, he received only $87,780.73, and
wrongfully permitted the company to retain the $7,219.27 in payment
of interest upon interest, because he, in good faith, believed that
it was entitled to such interest. There was no contract, within the
meaning of the statute, that the company should receive usurious
interest, for no such contract was attempted to be authorized by
the county court. In fact, the allowance by the guardian of
interest upon interest was under a mistaken view of the obligation
of the coupons in that regard. The remedy for the wrongful
retention of the $7,219.27 out of the amount the mortgage company
agreed to lend is to treat the loan as one for only $87,780.73,
making the calculation of interest on the principal sum on that
basis, and not to forfeit the interest on the sum actually received
by the guardian from the company.
6. It is contended that the mortgage company could not demand
interest, after Kingsbury reached his majority at a rate in excess
of six percent. The argument made in support of this proposition is
that, as the guardian could not, under the statute, have created a
debt, secured by mortgage, that did not mature at or before the
ward's majority, he had no authority to contract for the payment of
interest after the ward reached full age, and that the rate, after
his majority, must be controlled by the statute, and not by express
contract. We do not concur in this interpretation of the statute.
The guardian had authority, with leave of the court, to make these
loans, and to stipulate for any rate of interest not exceeding ten
percent. He stipulated for interest at nine percent, payable
half-yearly in each year until the principal sum "shall be fully
paid." Such a contract, in case of individuals capable of acting
for themselves, would bind the obligor to pay interest on the
principal sum at that rate after its maturity.
Phinney v.
Baldwin, 16 Ill. 108;
Etnyre v. McDaniel, 28 Ill.
201. We perceive no reason why the guardian may not, under the
statute, make such a contract, subject, of course, to the condition
that the maturity of the debt created by him on behalf of the
estate shall not extend beyond the ward's minority, and subject
therefore to the right of the
Page 138 U. S. 352
ward, immediately upon attaining full age, to pay off the debt,
or, by agreement with the lender, obtain an extension of the time
of maturity, and a less rate of interest. The statute does not mean
that the ward may retain the benefit of the contract after he
attains full age, and repudiate its provisions. Of course, what is
here said must be taken in connection with the statute of Illinois
providing that "judgment recovered before any court or magistrate
shall draw interest at the rate of six percent per annum from the
date of the same until satisfied." Rev.Stats.Illinois 1874, c. 74,
§ 3. Where the debt is merged in a judgment or decree, the
contract ceases to exist and the rate of interest is thereafter
controlled by the statute.
Mason v. Eakle, Breese 83;
Tindall v. Meeker, 1 Scammon 137;
White v.
Haffaker, 27 Ill. 349;
Wayman v. Cochrane, 35 Ill.
152;
Palmer v. Harris, 100 Ill. 276, 280;
Phinney v.
Baldwin and
Etnyre v. McDaniel, above cited;
Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cushman, 108 U. S.
51,
108 U. S.
54.
It results that the decree below must be reversed as to that
part which allowed only $6,963.07 as interest to December 15, 1885,
on the third loan. It should have allowed interest on $87,780.73,
the real amount of that loan at the rate of nine percent per annum
to the date to which, as above, the calculation was made, and
interest after that date at the statutory rate of six percent. In
that respect, and to that extent only, the decree must be
modified.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.